In 1780, in order to join the new opera company set up by Emperor Joseph II, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart started writing a new German opera on the then-popular theme of rescue of enslaved Europeans from Muslim pirates. Mozart wrote about two-thirds of an opera before abandoning it to go work on Idomeneo. The opera as Mozart left it lacks an overture and third act, but did have all the arias and ensembles for Acts I and II. Mozart hadn’t even come up with a title for the opera. The work was lost in his paperwork and only found after his death by Constanze Mozart in 1799. The title, Zaide, was given by Johann Anton André, who first published the fragments of the score in 1838.
In this work, two European slaves, Zaide and Gomatz, in the court of Sultan Soliman fall in love and convince their overseer to set them free. Captured again, the slaves appear to Soliman’s compassion and gain their freedom. They are to be returned to Europe to demonstrate that “also Asia can bring forth souls of virtue.”

Only one aria has come into the standard repertoire: Act I’s Ruhe sanft, mein holdes Leben (Rest in peace, my dear), sung by Gomatz to Zaide.

Why hasn’t this two-thirds opera entered the repertoire? It is by the exalted Mozart, after all. One reason might be that the librettist didn’t produce a book of much literary quality but the larger reason might be that Mozart had returned to the same subject with a different opera: The Abduction from the Seraglio, completed two years later. What we do see in Zaide is the beginning of Mozart’s dramatic language. Here, his arias still start conventionally, for the most part, but when he ventures into reforming declaimed speech and accompanies it with dramatic music that we start to see his innovation. We can certainly hear how this kind of writing influenced Beethoven in Fidelio. In Zaide, we see the composer at work and in Abduction, we get the fruits of his labors.